Government Experience
-
The state has been trying to revamp a pair of aging IT systems for some time, with one being related to worker's compensation and the other being the state’s financial systems.
-
The federal government’s now-defunct United States Digital Service has served as an inspiration for states that are increasingly putting human experience at the center of their tech projects.
-
The blockchain-based token, believed to be the first from a U.S. public entity, is for individual and institutional use. The executive director of the Wyoming Stable Token Commission is planning what comes next.
More Stories
-
State Rep. Melanie Stambaugh, R-Puyallup, asserts that the Ethics Board is interpreting the state’s 1994 ethics law in a way that doesn’t account for how people use modern technology.
-
It's a challenge to write a fair and legal policy that is as much for a "mouthpiece of the government" as a rank-and-file worker.
-
There are ways for jurisdictions without big city budgets to bring startup energy to the challenges they face.
-
The policy raised concerns because it gives remote access to unredacted court records — which can contain Social Security numbers and other personal information — to media.
-
Twitter is expanding its “muting” feature, but will that help or hurt its users?
-
The borough included the position in its 2017 proposed budget.
-
CincyInsights, a new Cincinnati Web portal with 15 dashboards, uses city data in different ways to make city services more interactive and easy to understand.
-
Whenever one of the four companies deletes a terrorism-related image or video, it will have the option of submitting the file’s unique identifier to a shared database.
-
Both Google and Facebook have promised to take measures to address the concerns of fake news masquerading as real news, but that's not enough to address fake news.
-
Microsoft's newest chatbot attempt appears to avoid discussion of politics, religion and race entirely, and has a narrower release than the first chatbot, Tay.
-
Boston.gov will now be home to the official record for the city's public meetings, hearings and notices.
-
The NYPD has been making a concerted effort over the last few years to utilize the social media platform for everything from sharing fun photos to disseminating up-to-the-minute information.
-
From fireside chats to abrasive tweets, American leaders have a history of using the most current technology to connect with the public.
-
If the site is increasingly where people are getting their news, what could the company do without taking up the mantle of being a final arbiter of truth?
-
The dashboard was released on Oct. 31, which also was the deadline for state agencies to submit their open data plans.
-
A detailed map shows that agencies across the United States are paying substantial fees to third-party applications to learn more about the populations they are sworn to protect.
-
Ordinarily it wouldn’t matter, except that Trump, who hasn’t held a news conference since July, uses the social media platform as his primary tool for communicating with the American public.
-
The tool can help agencies and businesses build privacy into initiatives with a modeling platform that allows them to "look before they leap." And it could catch on across the country.
Most Read